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    Reconstruction: Eric Foner

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    Mr. Maynard APUSH Period 3 10 January 2010 Reconstruction: Eric Foner The Reconstruction time period‚ 1865 through 1877‚ was a complex time for America. The southern part of the nation was in need of governmental‚ economical‚ and social repair after losing the Civil War. Radical Republicans‚ Democrats‚ and newly freed African Americans all were influential in the age of Reconstruction. Historians have struggled to put into words exactly what Reconstruction incorporates and precisely what the motives

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    In The New View of ReconstructionEric Foner says that even though Reconstruction failed to meet the goals of Radical Republicans‚ painlessly rebuild the South‚ and give the freed blacks complete rights and opportunities‚ Reconstruction did give African Americans some new chances and a brief taste of a free society. Political‚ social‚ and economic progress was made by blacks through the 14th and 15th amendments. Good things came out of the chaotic period of Reconstruction. The South actually was

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    Eric Foner

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    The most important chapter in this reading is when Foner talks about how freedom means different things to different people. Foner explains the two different types that people think about freedom. The first way people think of freedom is by protecting indivuals from authority. The second is to make choices freely without anyone concerned about you. This part was important because no one was use to this concept so it took time to get this in their head. As these different kinds of freedom were put

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    In this article‚ Foner states in his thesis that “since the early 1960s‚ a profound alteration of the place of blacks within American society‚ newly uncovered evidence‚ and changing definitions of history itself‚ have combined to transform our understanding of race relations‚ politics‚ and economic change during Reconstruction.” The article essentially encompasses the meaning of three different views of reconstruction: traditional‚ revisionist‚ and post-revisionist. After Foner defines these and

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    The thesis "The New View of Reconstruction"‚ Eric Foner reviews the constantly changing view on the subject of the Reconstruction. The postwar Reconstruction period has been viewed in many different lights throughout history but one fact remains true‚ that it was one of the most "violent‚ dramatic and controversial" times in US’s history (224). In the beginning of his thesis‚ Eric Foner talks about the way the Reconstruction was though as before the 1960 as a period of intense‚ corruption and manipulation

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    the United States. This time would be one of the most exciting ones for the United States. Eric Foner says‚ “The country enjoys abundant natural resources‚ a growing supply of labor‚ an expanding market for manufactured goods‚ and the availability of capital for investment‚” (2016). The United States was becoming a force to be reckoned with; however‚ the Industrial Revolution only sped up this process. As Foner explained‚ the United States was profiting in many ways. Careers centered on farming and

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    The Identity American English What makes you an individual and an American? The idea of what qualifies a person as an American is very vague. Eric Foner‚ in his article “Who is an American?” describes the idea of what qualifies a person as an American has changed over the years. There once was a time where the only people who were American citizen were white males that later became that all people living in the United States had the qualification of becoming a citizen. There are several factors

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    Drew Beyersdorf 6th U.S. History 12/7/12 Were Blacks Free During Reconstruction? Reconstruction was the South’s transformation following the Civil War. Reconstruction attempted to solve political‚ social‚ and economic problems between the South and the North. This time period was important to study because it showed America’s struggle to become reunited. To fully understand the question of whether Blacks were free during Reconstruction‚ “free” must be defined. To be free‚ within this historical

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    “The Black Codes” Although the Union (North) was victorious in the civil war and gained the freedom for millions of slaves‚ African Americans were blind to the effects to come. African Americans would face a new attack of obstacles and injustices during this time of the Reconstruction era. The Black Codes passed by the new southern government; which attempted to help regulate the lives of former slaves‚ but because of the lenient reconstruction policy’s lead by president Andrew Johnson white southerners

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    According to Eric Foner in his book Give Me Liberty!‚ politics in the eighteenth-century America had a more democratic quality than in Great Britain. In Britain the requirement of voting laws was property qualification. The main purpose of this was to guarantee that men who had an economic stake in society and the independence of judgment would be the ones to determine the policies of the government. Women‚ slaves‚ servants‚ the poor‚ tenants‚ and adult sons living with their parents all lacked

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